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PSYCHIATRY OVERVIEW Pharmacy 421 October 24, 2002 Albert Chaiet B.Sc.Phm., M.Sc.Phm., M.B.A. Beth Sproule B.Sc.Phm., Pharm.D Wende Wood B.A., B.S.P. Beliefs about Mental Illness What do YOU think????? The Myths of Mental Illness (source: Canadian Mental Health Association) People with mental illness are violent and dangerous People with mental illness are poor and/or less intelligent Mental illness is caused by a personal weakness Mental illness is a single, rare disorder The Myths of Mental Illness More likely to be victims of violence Can affect anyone regardless of intelligence, social class, income Not a character flaw-an illness-cannot just snap out of it A broad classification for many disorders What is Mental Illness? • Mental illnesses are characterized by alterations in thinking, mood or behaviour (or some combination thereof) associated with significant distress and impaired functioning. • The symptoms of mental illness vary from mild to severe, depending on the type of mental illness, the individual, the family and the socio-economic environment Mental Illnesses in Canada-An Overview Mental illnesses indirectly affect all Canadians through illness in a family member, friend or colleague 20% of Canadians will personally experience a mental illness during their lifetime Mental illnesses affect people of all ages, educational and income levels and cultures The onset of most mental illnesses occurs during adolescence and young adulthood Overview continued A complex interplay of genetic, biological, personality and environmental factors causes mental illnesses Mental illnesses can be treated effectively Mental illnesses are costly to the individual, the family, the health care system and the community The economic cost of mental illnesses in Canada > $7.3 billion (1993) Overview continued 86% of hospitalizations for mental illness in Canada are in general hospitals 3.8% of all admissions in general hospitals were due to anxiety disorders, bipolar disorders, schizophrenia, major depression, personality disorders, eating disorders and suicidal behaviour The stigma attached to mental illnesses presents a serious barrier not only to diagnosis and treatment but also to acceptance in the community What is Mental Illness? • Physical symptoms and illnesses • Concurrent disorders • Broad categories: Mood disorders Schizophrenia Anxiety disorders Personality disorders Substance abuse What is Mental Illness? Special issues: Suicide Special populations: Children Elderly Developmental delay (dual diagnosis) Mental Illness-Prevalence • 20% of Canadians will personally experience a mental illness during a one year period • 3% will experience profound suffering and persistent disablement Mental Illness-Prevalence • Mental Illness One-Year Prevalence Mood Disorders Major (unipolar) depression Bipolar disorder Dysthymia Schizophrenia Anxiety disorders 4.1 to 4.6 % 0.2 to 0.6 % 0.8 to 3.1 % 0.30% 12.2% Mental Illness-Prevalence Personality disorders 6.0 to 9.0 % (U.S.) Eating disorders – Anorexia 0.7 % women 0.2 % men – Bulimia 1 .5 % women 0.5 % men Deaths from suicide 2 % of all deaths 24% of all deaths (15-24) 16% of all deaths (24-45) Mental Illness-Prevalence Addictions alcohol – 1 in 10 report problems – >6,500 alcohol-related deaths (1995) – >80,000 hospitalized for alcohol-related problems Smoking 1 in 6 deaths (34,700) related to smoking Impact of Mental Illness • • • • 58.8% admissions women 50% admissions in age 25-44 25% admissions in age 45-64 High rate in 15 –24 age group Impact of Mental Illness • Onset of most mental illness during adolescence and young adulthood: Educational achievement Career opportunities Personal relationships Impact of Mental Illness • Suicide • Family impact • Economic impact-enormous $7.33 billion Stigma and Discrimination • Superstition, fear, old stereotypes etc • Force people to remain quiet about their mental illness, often causing them to delay seeking treatment,avoid following through with recommendations, avoid sharing concerns with family, friends, colleagues. Legal Framework • Legal framework for the care, treatment and hospitalization of those suffering from mental illness and those incapable of making their own life decisions • These laws are meant to balance the right to autonomy and self-determination with the right to care, protection and treatment as well as the safety of the community Mental Health Act • • • • • • • Psychiatric facilities Admitting Retention Access to records Financial incapacity Rights of patients to information Community treatment orders Health Care Consent Act • • • • • Informed consent prior to treatment or admission Emergency situations Capacity to provide consent Substitute decision-makers (SDM) Options re:improper SDM decisions Substitute Decisions Act • Powers of attorney, guardianships • Continuing powers of attorney for property or personal care • Courts • Rules DSM-IV-TR • Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition, Text Revision • American Psychiatric Association 2000 • Classification system for clinical, educational and research purposes • Categorical and subjective • Diagnostic criteria, course specifiers Multiaxial System • Axis 1 • Axis 2 • Axis 3 • Axis 4 • Axis 5 Clinical Disorders Personality Disorders/Mental Retardation General Medical Conditions Psychosocial and Environmental Problems Global Assessment of Functioning DSM-IV Major Depressive Episode Core Criteria 1. Depressed mood most of the day, nearly every day, as indicated by either subjective report (e.g., feels sad or empty) or observation made by others (e.g., appears tearful). 2. Markedly diminished interest or pleasure in all, or almost all, activities most of the day, nearly every day (as indicated by either subjective account or observation made by others). Major Depressive Episode Full Symptom Criteria 5 symptoms for 2 weeks and represent a change from previous functioning: • • • • • • depressed mood loss of interest/pleasure appetite sleep psychomotor agitation fatigue must include 1 of these • worthlessness • concentration • thoughts of death Major Depressive Episode Additional Criteria • Symptoms cause clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas of functioning. • Symptoms are not due to the direct physiological effects of a substance (e.g., a drug of abuse, a medication) or a general medical condition (e.g., hypothyroidism). • Symptoms are not better accounted for by Bereavement Major Depressive Episode Specifiers • • • • • • Mild, moderate, severe With psychotic features With catatonic features With melancholic features With atypical features With postpartum onset Major Depressive Disorder • One or more major depressive episodes • Never had a manic episode • Course Specifiers: – With inter-episode recovery – With seasonal pattern DSM-IV CLASSIFICATION Mood Disorders Anxiety Disorders Psychotic Disorders Sleep Disorders Childhood Disorders Cognitive Disorders Substance Use Disorders Eating Disorders Mood Disorders • • • • • Major Depressive Disorder Dysthymic Disorder Bipolar I Disorder Bipolar II Disorder Cyclothymic Disorder Anxiety Disorders • • • • • • Panic Disorder Specific Phobia Social Phobia Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Generalized Anxiety Disorder Psychotic Disorders • Schizophrenia • Schizoaffective Disorder Sleep Disorders • Primary Insomnia • Primary Hypersomnia • Narcolepsy Cognitive Disorders • Dementia – Alzheimer’s – Vascular Dementia • Amnestic Disorders • Delirium Eating Disorders • Anorexia Nervosa • Bulimia Nervosa Substance Use Disorders • Substance Dependence • Substance Abuse • Substance Induced Disorders – Intoxication – Withdrawal Childhood Disorders • Learning Disorders • Developmental Disorders – Autistic Disorder • Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder • Conduct Disorder THERAPEUTIC CLASSIFICATION Antidepressants Mood Disorders Mood Stabilizers Anxiety Disorders Sedative-Hypnotics Sleep Disorders Psychotic Disorders Antipsychotics Antidepressants TCAs • • • • amitriptyline (e.g., Elavil) nortriptyline (e.g., Aventyl) imipramine (e.g., Tofranil) desipramine (e.g., Norpramin) • clomipramine (e.g., Anafranil) MAOIs • tranylcypromine (e.g., Parnate) • phenelzine (e.g., Nardil) • moclobemide (e.g., Manerix) SSRIs • • • • • fluoxetine (e.g., Prozac) paroxetine (e.g., Paxil) sertraline (e.g., Zoloft) fluvoxamine (e.g., Luvox) citalopram (e.g., Celexa) Others • nefazodone (e.g., Serzone) • venlafaxine (e.g., Effexor) • bupropion (e.g., Wellbutrin ) trazodone (e.g., Desyrel) mirtazapine (e.g., Remeron ) Mood Stabilizers • lithium (e.g., Carbolith) • valproic acid (e.g., Epival) • carbamazepine (e.g., Tegretol) Sedative-Hypnotics Barbiturates secobarbital (e.g., Seconal) Benzodiazepines diazepam (e.g., Valium) lorazepam (e.g., Ativan) clonazepam (e.g., Rivotril) alprazolam (e.g., Xanax) temazepam (e.g., Restoril) Non-Benzodiazepine Hypnotics zaleplon (Starnoc ) Buspirone (e.g., Buspar ) Antipsychotics Typicals haloperidol (e.g., Haldol) – chlorpromazine (e.g., Largactil) – perphenazine (e.g., Trilafon) – thioridazine (e.g., Mellaril) – pimozide (e.g., Orap) – fluphenazine (e.g., Moditen) Atypicals – – – – clozapine (e.g., Clozaril) risperidone (e.g., Risperdal) olanzapine (e.g., Zyprexa) quetiapine (e.g., Seroquel) THERAPEUTIC CLASSIFICATION Mood Disorders Antidepressants Anxiety Disorders Sleep Disorders Psychotic Disorders Mood Stabilizers Sedative-Hypnotics Eating Disorders Substance Use Disorders Antipsychotics Etiology of Mental Health Disorders • • • • • • ???? Biological Environmental Neurotransmitter theories (NE, DA, 5HT) Neuroendocrine theories Membrane and cation theories Second messenger theories Concurrent Disorders • Substance use disorders and other mental health disorders • Very high comorbidity • Pharmacological Challenges: – – – – Diagnosis (drug-induced?, self-treatment?) Drug interactions Compliance Abuse of therapeutic agents Guidelines • Canadian Network for Mood and Anxiety Treatments (CANMAT) – www.canmat.org – Depression • Ontario Program for Optimal Therapeutics – www.opot.org/guidelines – Anxiety POTENTIAL AREAS FOR PHARMACIST CONTRIBUTION (Royal Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain Mental Health Task Force Report September 2000) Prevention Recognition of undiagnosed illness Responsibilities during active treatment Support to patients, families and caregivers PREVENTION Raise awareness and help minimize stigma posters, community lectures Promote healthy lifestyles- health promotion leaflets Liaise with other members of community mental health team and caregivers to improve quality of pharmaceutical care for service users includes care planning for patient and professional development for team members PREVENTION Ensuring the work environment and the workload placed on pharmacists and their staff is not detrimental to their own mental health!! RECOGNITION OF UNDIAGNOSED ILLNESS Respond to symptoms potentially caused by undiagnosed mental illness (which may or may not have presented initially as other health problems) Identify mental health problems which may be caused by side effects of medications Then Refer patients as appropriate Screening Questions For Use In Primary Care Setting (U.S. Preventive Services Task Force 2002) US task force looked at literature and concluded that asking two simple questions about mood and anhedonia may be as effective as using longer instruments (Hamilton depression scale, etc) Intended for GP’s, but can absolutely be applicable to community pharmacists - frequent patient contact, can observe changes over time, patients sometimes disclose more than they would to MD Screening Questions For Use In Primary Care Setting (U.S. Preventive Services Task Force 2002) “Over the past 2 weeks, have you felt: – Down, depressed, or hopeless?” – Little interest or pleasure in doing things?” If patient answers yes to either of these questions, refer them for further assessment DURING ACTIVE TREATMENT Support patients and caregivers in maintaining adherence to treatment Identify adverse reactions and drug interactions and give advice on management Monitor treatment and outcomes Provide drug information Promote safe, effective & appropriate drug treatment Liaise with others for continuity of care Recognize signs of relapse and refer SOME OF THE REASONS FOR NON-COMPLIANCE Feel that the medications don’t work When they feel better, they don’t ‘need’ the medications anymore Overly complex regimens Fear of drug dependence Symptoms are enjoyable Fear of recovery Lack of family support Lack of alliance with psychiatrist & other health care professionals COMPLIANCE ISSUES Be patient; recognize that non-compliance and relapse are often the rule, not the exception Remember that most other patients (patients on antihypertensives, antibiotics) also have high levels of non-compliance Offer dosettes or blister packs If med is given in divided doses, ask why Investigate excessive polypharmacy PHARMACEUTICAL CARE Developing rapport/ therapeutic alliance is ESSENTIAL Patient focus – negotiation; patient goals rather than paternalistic approach Monitor for drug related problems Encourage patients to check OTC purchases, herbals, etc. with you (or other team member) Encourage lowest effective dose, especially with maintenance treatment (this is by far the toughest “battle” to fight!!) PC is continuous - not over when one DRP solved PARADIGM SHIFT Our goal used to be to reduce psychiatric symptoms and manage DRP’s such as EPS Now the goal is much more ambitious – functional recovery BUT Medical DRP’s such as weight gain, glucose intolerance, cardiac effects are now in the forefront CO-MORBIDITY Psychiatric patients have higher than average risk of medical co-morbidity and/or substance abuse co-morbidity Medical and substance abuse comorbidity predictor of more adverse mental health outcome LABELS AND TERMINOLOGY Follow patient’s lead Newly diagnosed may uncomfortable with terms, however some patients actually prefer labels as it ‘explains’ their symptoms Don’t assume diagnosis – Many psychotropics used for multiple psychiatric or nonpsychiatric indications, both approved and unapproved DSM-IV-TR vs. Symptoms – Many symptoms cross more than one diagnosis – Meds treat symptoms, not the disorder per se LABELS AND TERMINOLOGY Attempts to de-stigmatize: – Neuroleptic is outdated term – Anti-psychotic is correct term – Atypical is also probably outdated • Doesn’t really describe drug class, and some patients worry that they are “different” or “atypical” • Preferred term may be “second generation”? LABELS AND TERMINOLOGY – Disorders vs. Disease vs. Illness – Some patients still prefer “manic depression” to “bipolar” as they feel it describes the illness better – A person is not “a schizophrenic”; they are someone who has “schizophrenia”, or “schizoprenic symptoms” – Just what exactly IS “normal”? PROVIDE DRUG INFORMATION Role and benefits of drug therapy Potential and actual side effects Supporting patients by providing information and advice to those wishing to reduce their doses, or to come off medication completely Full disclosure of risk of withdrawal effects and chance of relapse Encourage further dialogue with team PATIENT COUNSELLING TIPS Ask: what did your doctor tell you about the medication? May give insight into diagnosis/symptoms being treated, & level of knowledge about meds Don’t assume a long-term patient knows all about their medication Always tell patient when med should start to work – they often don’t realize how long it takes for onset of effect Start with most common, transient side effects and how to manage PATIENT COUNSELLING TIPS Mention what signs to watch for more serious reactions, and put in perspective (seriousness of illness, incidence of rxn) Reinforce need to take regularly, and inform of possible discontinuation symptoms Start dialogue about chronic nature of illness and need for long term pharmacotherapy, even when symptoms improve Explain difference between “addiction” and longterm maintenance therapy WRITTEN PATIENT INFO Patients with psychiatric illness have as much right to this as patients with medical illness; won’t necessarily ‘overreact’ Informed consent issues May or may not have literacy issues Very important to discuss WHY they are taking this medication - written info usually doesn’t include unapproved indications, and may use terminology they are unfamiliar with, so go over it with them, don’t just staple to the bag! MISSED DOSES Very important to mention discontinuation syndrome with antidepressants, as this can happen with even one missed dose Most psychotropics can be given once daily, so try to simplify regimen and avoid missed doses If more than 2 doses missed, may not be able to restart at original dose (example: clozapine) POLYPHARMACY Increases risk of non-compliance, drug interactions, side effects Is often the rule rather than exception in psychiatry Almost all combos not “evidence based”; clinical trials often of limited usefulness due to heterogenicity of patients, unlimited number of combos POLYPHARMACY Some combinations are more rational than others based on complementary mechanisms SSRI + bupropion Other combinations are usually irrational and likely indefensible 1st generation antipsychotic + 2nd generation antipsychotic 3 mood stabilizers + antipsychotic + antidepressant POLYPHARMACY Even if a combination seems irrational, there may be a semi-reasonable explanation (not ideal, but okay) – Patient on lower dose 1st generation antipsychotic depot to cover symptoms if they miss doses of 2nd generation oral antipsychotic – Approach MD in non-confrontational way; “I’ve not seen this particular combination before, and I was interested/curious/ wanted to double-check it with you” – Leave note on file to avoid multiple phone calls A FINAL THOUGHT/ RANT ON POLYPHARMACY Often a patient was in the middle of being switched from one med to another, and they ‘stabilized’ midpoint so the meds were kept that way Is ‘stable’ the best we can offer our patients?? Who benefits - us or them? Maybe VERY SLOWLY decrease dose of one med, monitor closely and hopefully eventually discontinue CONTINUITY OF CARE Confirm medication regimen when patient is discharged or changes pharmacies Try to help ensure continuity and consistency of supply of medications, and explain any changes Ask patient first about dose change before calling MD Explain change in brand/generic - some patients can be very upset by minor changes in colour or markings RECOGNIZING SIGNS OF RELAPSE Relapse doesn’t usually happen suddenly watch for early warning signs Some signs of relapse are more “obvious” and consistent - “decompensation” Other signs vary from individual, so get to know your patients! And help them to know themselves and recognize their own early signs so they can ask feel comfortable expressing concerns to team members SUICIDE Some studies have found some psychiatric meds can reduce suicide risk when they are used properly Non-compliance, sub-therapeutic dose, relapse, poor monitoring are risk factors Risk higher just after hospital discharge and/or starting new med Difficult to detect signs of self-harm SUICIDE Respect confidentiality, BUT when concern is great enough, contact caregiver, MD or team member Encourage patients and families not to hoard discontinued meds; return to pharmacy for disposal Those thought to be at risk should receive smaller quantities of medications If you have a patient who does suicide, get counselling for yourself KEY ROLES FOR COMMUNITY PHARMACISTS Educate patients and psychiatrists about medical aspects of care Check for drug interactions from different prescribers Smoking cessation support Increase awareness/sensitivity about concurrent substance use/abuse PROVIDING SUPPORT Provide information about local, provincial & other services, such as self help groups, telephone helplines, etc Educate caregivers about medications, side effects, drug interactions; make them active participants in monitoring for DRP’s Encourage caregivers to take time to care for themselves KEYS TO CARING FOR PSYCHIATRIC PATIENTS Treat them with empathy and patience Treat them like a person, not a diagnosis Respect patient confidentiality BUT Report drastic changes in behavior to patient care team/family Recognize that lack of insight is part of the illness and relapse is common Adapt for differences in comprehension, cognitive function, literacy, etc. KEYS TO CARING FOR PSYCHIATRIC PATIENTS DON’T say “I know how you feel” – you probably don’t; try saying “I can see how that would be frustrating” DON’T condescend or talk down to them DON’T be frightened or uncomfortable DON’T confront their delusions if possible DON’T tolerate abusive behavior; set limits as you would for other customers KEYS TO CARING FOR PSYCHIATRIC PATIENTS If the dose or combo of meds is unusual, check with patient or caregiver first, to see if this is what they have been taking and if they know why If you need to call the doctor, don’t hide behind the counter and call - let the patient know what you are doing and why in order to avoid paranoia; emphasizes your role as team member/ advocate for patient Which Warning Label Do You Use? Why? WHAT YOU CAN DO Keep up to date with CE Join CPNP or other listserve Know when to ask for consultation or referral Addiction clinical consultation service at CAMH: 1-888-720-ACCS Keep up with media reports to anticipate worries/questions Learn from your patients! Honesty and humor!!!